A veteran Border Patrol agent and a City Council representative told students at the University of Texas at El Paso that drug legalization and regulation is a better solution to the El Paso/Juarez region’s ongoing violence than the current prohibition laws.

Advocates of drug legalization state their case

EL PASO — A veteran Border Patrol agent and a City Council representative told students at the University of Texas at El Paso that drug legalization and regulation is a better solution to the El Paso/Juarez region’s ongoing violence than the current prohibition laws.

The Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) UTEP chapter hosted District 8 city representative Beto O’Rourke and retired Border Patrol and Homeland Security agent Terry Nelson at the recent Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) Border Conference.

A proposal to legalize narcotics was brought forward at the El Paso City Council earlier this year by O’Rourke as a solution to the escalating drug cartel violence that claimed 1,600 lives in 2008 in Ciudad Juarez and more than 10,000 others in Mexico since 2007. O’Rourke’s proposal called for the governments of Mexico and the United States to work together and re-examine the policies on drugs. Reaction against the measure was swift. A letter from U.S. Representative Silvestre Reyes (D-TX) stated that crucial federal funding for the city would be withheld if such legislation were passed; yet no specific amount was stated in the letter to be withheld. He told the City Council that debate on the issue could come later. O’Rourke’s proposal made national headlines but was vetoed by Mayor John Cook.

O’Rourke told the students that he was pleased to have heard UTEP student input at the debate on the legalization of narcotics at City Council. “They were amongst the most refined and educated about the subject matter,” he said.

“Drugs don’t cause crime, prohibition causes crime,” was a phrase reiterated several times by LEAP spokesman Nelson to a classroom of UTEP students. LEAP is a 10,000-member organization that believes in the legalized regulation of all drugs in order to decriminalize. “We believe that the current war on drugs is a total policy failure,” Nelson said.

Nelson worked in law-enforcement for three decades. His service included the US Border Patrol, US Customs Service, and Department of Homeland Security and was directly involved in counter-narcotics missions in the “war on drugs.” “Prohibition is a luxury we can no longer afford,” said Nelson. “It has only empowered and enriched drug cartels.”

Nelson’s power point presentation showed crucial information on the positive outcome of drug regulation rather than prohibition. Many American’s are not aware that the current illegal drug trade yields $500-billion in revenue a year —eight percent of the world’s total trade revenue. This illegal drug world trade is untaxed and unregulated. If a tax were imposed on this revenue it could pay for the treatment of all drug addicts in the United States, according to Nelson.

The United States has the highest number of drug users in the world. Prisons are massively over-crowded. America’s prisons house more people in jail in the world than Russia and China combined. This amounts to 22 percent of the world’s prisoners but only having 4.6 percent of the world’s total population, Nelson said.

Most convicts are serving time for minor drug possession and they are treated as social outcasts after serving their sentences. This crime leaves 1.96-million children without a parent or sibling at home destroying American families, according to Nelson.

Statistics show that 74 percent of Americans think that the “War on Drugs” is a failure. “If you have to regulate something then it has to be legal,” Nelson said. “A system of regulation rather than prohibition is a more ethical and reasonable public policy approach. It is time to do what is morally right, not what the law tells you to do,” he said.

1 Comment

Debaters debate the two wars as if Nixon’s civil war on Woodstock Nation didn’t yet run amok. One need not travel to China to find indigenous cultures lacking human rights or to Cuba for political prisoners. America leads the world in percentile behind bars, thanks to ongoing persecution of hippies, radicals, and non-whites under banner of the war on drugs. If we’re all about spreading liberty abroad, then why mix the message at home? Peace on the home front would enhance global credibility.

The drug czar’s Rx for prison fodder costs dearly, as lives are flushed down expensive tubes. There’s trouble on the border. My shaman’s second opinion is that psychoactive plants are God’s gift. God didn’t screw up. Canadian Marc Emery sold seeds that enable American farmers to outcompete cartels with superior domestic herb. He is being extradited to prison, for doing what government wishes it could do, reduce demand for Mexican.

The constitutionality of the CSA (Controlled Substances Act of 1970) derives from an interstate commerce clause. Only by this authority does it reincarnate Al Capone, endanger homeland security, and throw good money after bad. Official policy is to eradicate, not tax, the number-one cash crop in the land. America rejected prohibition, but it’s back. Apparently, SWAT teams don’t need no stinking amendment. Father, forgive those who make it their business to know not what they do.

Nixon promised that the Schafer Commission would support the criminalization of his enemies, but it didn’t. No matter, the witch-hunt was on. No amendments can assure due process under an anti-science law without due process itself. Psychology hailed the breakthrough potential of LSD, until the CSA halted all research and pronounced that marijuana has no medical use, period.

The RFRA (Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993) allows Native American Church members to eat peyote, which functions like LSD. Americans shouldn’t need a specific church membership to obtain their birthright freedom of religion. Denial of entheogen sacrament to any American, for mediation of communion with his or her maker, precludes free exercise of religious liberty.

Freedom of speech presupposes freedom of thought. The Constitution doesn’t enumerate any governmental power to embargo diverse states of mind. How and when did government usurp this power to coerce conformity? The Mayflower sailed to escape coerced conformity. Legislators who would limit cognitive liberty lack jurisdiction.

Common-law must hold that adults are the legal owners of their own bodies. The Founding Fathers decreed that the right to the pursuit of happiness is inalienable. Socrates said to know your self. Mortal lawmakers should not presume to thwart the intelligent design that molecular keys unlock spiritual doors. Persons who appreciate their own free choice of path in life should tolerate seekers’ self-exploration.